Fwd: Re: [AGL] Clark's pointed to this:

Frances Morey frances_morey at yahoo.com
Tue Sep 13 14:51:17 EDT 2005


Are you not tellin' if there's some new woman interest that's got you by the attention?
It's good to hear that things in NM are sympatico.
I say watch out Hillary, here comes Gore...
Frances

Gerry <> wrote:
From: "Gerry" <mesmo at gilanet.com>
To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s" <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
Subject: Re: [AGL] Clark's pointed to this:
Date: Tue, 13 Sep 2005 12:43:04 -0600

Frances,
I am alive and well and enjoying the incredible beauty of early autumn in the valley of the Gila where the long-legged water birds gather and the deer are fat from the marvelous growth of all green things, spurred by the floods of February.
 
Perhaps even more provocative than Al Gore.
 
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/091205D.shtml
G
 
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Frances Morey 
To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s 
Sent: Tuesday, September 13, 2005 11:51 AM
Subject: Re: [AGL] Clark's pointed to this:


EBR (everybody but Roger) For him it's ABD&Rs
 
Have any news from Gerry Storm?
 
Frances

Michael Eisenstadt <michaele at hotpop.com> wrote:
Clark,

Very provocative. Makes one think that Americans
might wake up some time soon and vote Democrat
again.

Mike

----------------------------------------------

Al Gore: When there is No Vision, the People Perish
by Bob Burnett
CommonDreams.org
Sunday, September 11, 2005

Friday morning, when they arrived at the opening plenary session of the 
first-ever Sierra Club convention held at San Francisco's Moscone Center, 
several thousand activists got a surprise. Instead of an address by 
Executive Director, Carl Pope, they heard a rousing speech from former Vice 
President, Al Gore

Gore's theme was based upon the quote from Proverbs, "When there is no 
vision, the people perish." He dwelt at length on the catastrophe of 
Hurricane Katrina observing, "It is important that we learn the right 
lessons from what happened, or else we will repeat the mistakes that were 
made."

Gore identified three basic lessons that the American people must grasp: the 
first is deceptively simple - Presidents should be expected to pay 
attention. The former Vice President recalled that on August 6, 2001, 
President Bush received an intelligence briefing, "Bin Laden determined to 
strike in U.S.," but took no action as, "it was vacation time."

Four years later, the Bush Administration received dire warnings of the 
damage that would be done to New Orleans, and the Gulf Coast, if Hurricane 
Katrina kept to its projected course; nothing was done, "It was, once again, 
vacation time."

The second lesson, according to Gore, involves presidential accountability. 
"There has been no accountability for horrible misjudgment and outright 
falsehood - leading to the tragedy of Iraq." The former VP argued that this 
has produced an atmosphere, in the White Hou se, where "there is no fear of 
accountability" for the Federal missteps surrounding Hurricane Katrina.

Gore opined that the management philosophy of the Bush Administration has 
been dictated by conservative lobbyist, Grover Nordquist, who famously 
boasted, "my goal is to get government down to the size where we can drown 
it in a bathtub." Gore indicated that, as a result, the President 
deliberately shrunk the size of FEMA, rendering it "weak and helpless."

The former Vice President's third lesson is that Presidents ought to heed 
warnings. The Bush Administration ignored distress signals about Al Qaeda 
and the frailty of the New Orleans' levees, and continues to disregard 
warnings about global warming.

"The average hurricane will get stronger because of global warming, he said, 
noting a scientific study, recently reported in "Nature" magazine, that 
concluded, "Since 1970, the average hurricane has been 50 percent strong er," 
specifically because the oceans have grown warmer.

Gore passionately compared present-day America to Great Britain on the eve 
of World War II. He recalled the words that Winston Churchill spoke after 
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's infamous 1938 appeasement of Hitler,

"They are decided to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for 
drift, solid for fluidity, all powerful to be impotent -

This is only the beginning of the reckoning. This is only the first sip, the 
first foretaste of a bitter cup which will be proffered to us year by year 
unless by a supreme recovery of moral health and martial vigour, we arise 
again and take our stand for freedom as in the olden time."

Noting the chilling similarities between the crisis-management style of Bush 
and Chamberlain, the former VP declared that it is time that Americans, 
"recover our moral health and demand accountability."

Gore concluded his speec h by observing that the US is at "a moral moment - 
This is not about scientific debate or political dialogue, but about who we 
are.

The former Vice President remembered that, after the end of the civil war, 
Abraham Lincoln remarked, "As the problems are new, we must disenthrall 
ourselves from the past."

Gore implored his audience to help America be similarly disenthralled, "to 
shed our illusions that have led us to ignore the consequences of the global 
warming that has already begun."

And the crowd went wild.

I don't know why the geographic state of the United States

was mysteriously steered away from its lawfully elected leader.

If there is purpose here,

It is a mysterious purpose indeed.

Perhaps that purpose is beginning to reveal itself. 

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